Understanding UK State Pension 2025/26
Full State Pension pays £221.20 weekly (£11,502/year) requiring 35 qualifying years of National Insurance contributions. State Pension age is currently 66, rising to 67 by 2028 for those born after April 1960. A 30-year-old earning £35,000 contributing £500/month to workplace pension with 3% employer match could accumulate £456,000 by age 67 (assuming 5% annual returns), generating £18,240/year private pension income plus £11,502 state pension totaling £29,742 annual retirement income.
Check your State Pension forecast at gov.uk/check-state-pension to see your projected amount and identify any contribution gaps. Voluntary Class 3 NI contributions (£17.45/week) can fill gaps from unemployment or low earnings. Each missing year reduces state pension by roughly £275/year (£5,500 over 20-year retirement). Self-employed workers must ensure Class 2 (£3.45/week if profits exceed £6,725) and Class 4 (9% on £12,570-£50,270) contributions are paid to qualify for full state pension.